Take One (Canadian magazine)
Take One (published Montreal, 1966–1979) (ISSN 0039-9132, OCLC 40366931) Founded by three "graduates" of the McGill Film Society—Peter Lebensold, Adam Symansky and John Roston -- Take One was the first serious English-Canadian film magazine. This—first of the two Canadian film magazines entitled Take One—gave due attention to the newly emerging Canadian film scene, but was international in scope. It was inexpensive (initially 25 cents a copy), and aimed to publish bi-monthly—a goal which it rarely achieved. The magazine attracted some of the best film journalists of the time (including Time magazine reviewer Jay Cocks, James Monaco [author of the standard textbook, How to Read a Film], Alanna Nash, and the Montreal cartoonists Terry Mosher and Vittorio Fiorucci) -- and often filmmakers the
Wikipage disambiguates
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Take One (Canadian magazine)
Take One (published Montreal, 1966–1979) (ISSN 0039-9132, OCLC 40366931) Founded by three "graduates" of the McGill Film Society—Peter Lebensold, Adam Symansky and John Roston -- Take One was the first serious English-Canadian film magazine. This—first of the two Canadian film magazines entitled Take One—gave due attention to the newly emerging Canadian film scene, but was international in scope. It was inexpensive (initially 25 cents a copy), and aimed to publish bi-monthly—a goal which it rarely achieved. The magazine attracted some of the best film journalists of the time (including Time magazine reviewer Jay Cocks, James Monaco [author of the standard textbook, How to Read a Film], Alanna Nash, and the Montreal cartoonists Terry Mosher and Vittorio Fiorucci) -- and often filmmakers the
has abstract
Take One (published Montreal, ...... transferred to Northern Stars.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
704,897,586
date
subject
type
comment
Take One (published Montreal, ...... i) -- and often filmmakers the
@en
label
Take One (Canadian magazine)
@en